emerged
past simple and past participle ofemerge
单词 | emerged |
释义 | emerged past simple and past participle ofemerge emerge verb[I] uk/ɪˈmɜːdʒ/us/ɪˈmɝːdʒ/emergeverb[I](APPEAR)B2 toappearby coming out of something or out from behind something: She emergedfromthesea,bluewithcold. to appear
to come to the end of adifficultperiodorexperience: The Prince emergedunscathedfromthescandal.
Appearing & disappearing
You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: Experiencing and suffering emergeverb[I](BECOME KNOWN)C1 tobecomeknown,especiallyas aresultofexaminingsomething oraskingquestionsabout it: Thefactsbehind thescandalaresureto emergeeventually. [+ that]Ithas emergedthatsecrettalkshad been going on between the twocompaniesbefore thetakeoverwasannounced. She's the mostexcitingBritishsingerto emerge on thepopscenefor adecade.
Revealing secrets & becoming known
Examplesofemergedemerged In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives. Some of these examples may show the adjective use. A different pictureemergedusing the self-report measures where significant differences were seen in all dimensions except paternal authoritarianism. From theCambridge English Corpus When these were tested on data from pilot studies, a number of new categoriesemergedand others were refined into more precise definitions. From theCambridge English Corpus Irreconcilable differences between opposing factions soonemerged, sometimes producing a complete breakdown of co-operation. From theCambridge English Corpus No significant differencesemergedbetween the relatives of bipolar and unipolar probands with respect to risk for affective disorder. From theCambridge English Corpus As such, thereemergeda contradiction between the traditional orientation and support base of the ruling party and its apparent conversion to neo-liberal policies. From theCambridge English Corpus Political savvy thusemergedas an additional, key entrepreneurial skill which frequently assisted business success in the post-colonial state. From theCambridge English Corpus The important question is exactly how much surplus production was possible, what level of institutional complexity could be maintained, and what vulnerabilitiesemerged. From theCambridge English Corpus Once human knowledge, morality and aesthetics haveemerged, they cannot usefully be analysed by evolutionary theory. From theCambridge English Corpus The movement whichemergedwas not only much larger but also vastly more energetic and ambitious. From theCambridge English Corpus Indeed, archaeology firstemergedalongside modernity, as an investigation into the origins and depths of human historical achievement through the medium of its material residue. From theCambridge English Corpus A strong, curvaceous woman, she stands alone, naked and proud, her feet dragging in the water of the well from which she has justemerged. From theCambridge English Corpus No clear pattern to understandingemergedamong those women who claimed to have knowledge of the test. From theCambridge English Corpus Four problemsemergedas the legal process unfolded. From theCambridge English Corpus Negotiations between the military government and the various opposition movements haveemergedas the only viable solution to the crisis. From theCambridge English Corpus A clear pattern hasemergedin vernacular education policy. From theCambridge English Corpus These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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